King Crimson - 2003-11-11 Theatre St. Denis, Montreal, Canada (2003)

  • 19 Jan, 12:14
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Artist:
Title: 2003-11-11 Theatre St. Denis, Montreal, Canada
Year Of Release: 2003
Label: DGMLive.com
Genre: Art Rock, Prog Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 01:34:03
Total Size: 561 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. The Power To Believe (A Cappella) (1:43)
02. Level Five (7:24)
03. ProzaKc Blues (5:18)
04. The ConstruKction Of Light (8:42)
05. Facts Of Life (5:29)
06. ELEKTRIK (7:51)
07. The Power To Believe II (8:14)
08. Dinosaur (6:13)
09. One Time (8:30)
10. Happy With What You Have To Be Happy With (3:19)
11. Dangerous Curves (Incomplete) (5:13)
12. Larks Tongues In Aspic Part IV (11:39)
13. The Power To Believe III (7:33)
14. Adrian Announcement (0:34)
15. Red (6:25)

The Crimson machine is clearly road-tested and well-oiled by the time it makes its way across the border to Montreal. Ten gigs in and King Crimson is working through a setlist that whose peaks and troughs are now very familiar. Tonight, after Living Colour’s opening set, the band tackle Level Five, ProzaKc, The ConstruKction Of Light, FaKcts Of Life and EleKtriK with the kind of professional elan that you’d expect at this stage in the tour. To these ears, however, the performance overall, while possessing many highlights, doesn’t really catch that ineffable ‘otherness’ that sometimes graces a KC gig until The Power To Believe Pt II. Even here though the effect is relatively fleeting with Dinosaur’s expected roar sounding rather muted in comparison to other shows. The energy picks up after Happy and an incomplete Dangerous Curves - sadly minus its intro but otherwise intact - nicely sets up Larks’ Tongues In Aspic Part IV. Even when it lacks the punch that one normally finds in the piece, there’s still a lot to admire in this construction of contrasting hard edges and clean flowing lines. “Thank you very much,” says a tired sounding Belew at the end of the track to the joyous applause of the near sell-out crowd in this 2,000-seater venue. While Red provides the final note of the evening, it's a meditative solo from Trey Gunn in The Deception Of Thrush, with his notes briefly hovering in silence, that captures that extra-special something that has been conspicuous by its absence for most of the show.

Robert Fripp - Guitar
Adrian Belew - Guitar, Vocals
Pat Mastelotto - Acoustic And Electronic Percussion
Trey Gunn - Warr Guitar